ps 0500: the democratic peace theory
TRANSCRIPT
Outline
• Brief History of IR Theory
• The Democratic Peace
• Explanations for the Democratic Peace?
• Correlation Does Not Imply Causation
• The McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Economic Interdependence
Roadmap
• Before: Unitary actor assumption
• Now: Perhaps type of government matters
• Next week: Perhaps leaders matter
Intellectual History
• For the majority of IR’s history, scholars assumed that states were identical except for in relative power (Realists)
• Other scholars challenged this assumption in the 1980s
– Evidence overwhelmingly supports the second group
Outline
• Brief History of IR Theory
• The Democratic Peace
• Explanations for the Democratic Peace?
• Correlation Does Not Imply Causation
• The McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Economic Interdependence
Ultimately, the best strategy to ensure our security and to build
a durable peace is to support the advance of democracy
elsewhere. Democracies don't attack each other.
(1994 State of the Union)
Democracies don't go to war with each other. And the reason why is the people of
most societies don't like war, and they understand what war means.... I've got great faith in democracies to promote peace. And
that's why I'm such a strong believer that the way forward in the Middle East…is to
promote democracy. (2004 Press Conference)
Some Caveats
• How do we define democracy?
– Is Mexico a democracy?
– Is Russia a democracy?
– Was the United States in 1796 a democracy?
Some Caveats
• How do we define war?
• Correlates of War is the standard dataset for war (1816-present)
– Requirements
• 1000 battle deaths (lots of death)
• At least 100 battle deaths per side or 1000 troops committed (balanced fight)
• Continuous conflict
Some Caveats
• Democracies sometimes do fight other democracies
– Ancient Greece
– War of 1812
– Spanish-American War
– Lebanon/Israel Six Day War
– Kargil War
Some Caveats
• Democracies aren’t always friendly to democratic ideals
– Iran 1953
– Indonesia 1957
– Chile 1973
– Nicaragua 1984
Some Caveats
• Most democracy versus democracy data we have comes from the Cold War
– Almost all democracies allied against communism
Outline
• Brief History of IR Theory
• The Democratic Peace
• Explanations for the Democratic Peace?
• Correlation Does Not Imply Causation
• The McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Economic Interdependence
Culture of Contracts
• Behavioral explanation for the democratic peace
• In democracies, citizens have incentive to cooperate through contractual agreements
– Violence is not allowed
Transparency
• Rationalist explanations for war: uncertainty about resolve causes conflict
• How can rival states be uncertain about a democracy’s level of resolve?
– Public polling data is readily available to everyone, including the evil dictators of the world
– Less private information less war
Electoral Incentives
• Selectorate—the pool of individuals who can make up winning coalitions
• Winning coalition—a group of individuals necessary to remain in power
– Democracies: Half of all voters plus 1
– Autocracies: Military commanders, a handful of politicians
Electoral Incentives
• War is costly, but some benefit
• Easy to buy off a small number of people
– Saddam Hussein steal Kuwaiti oil buy off his cronies
• Hard to buy off a large number of people
– Since democracies share the burden of war relatively equally, democratic leaders have less incentive to fight
Outline
• Brief History of IR Theory
• The Democratic Peace
• Explanations for the Democratic Peace?
• Correlation Does Not Imply Causation
• The McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Economic Interdependence
Correlation
• When A is present, B tends to be present as well and vice versa
– When two democracies are present, peace tends to be present as well
Correlation
• When A is present, B tends to be present as well and vice versa
– When two democracies are present, peace tends to be present as well
• This tells us nothing about causation!
Correlation
• For the moment, assume there actually is a causal relationship
– Correlations can exist randomly
• A fair coin appears biased every now and then
– We have statistical tests to ensure this is not the case
Problems with Inferring Causation
1. B causes A.
2. A and B cause each other.
3. C causes A and B.
4. A causes C which causes B. But D also causes C which causes B.
Problems with Inferring Causation
1. B causes A.
2. A and B cause each other.
3. C causes A and B.
4. A causes C which causes B. But D also causes C which causes B.
Example: United Nations Failure?
• Presence of United Nations troops is correlated with the outbreak of civil war. Therefore, we should not station U.N. troops in hotspots.
Example: United Nations Failure?
• Presence of United Nations troops is correlated with the outbreak of civil war. Therefore, we should not station U.N. troops in hotspots.
– But U.N. troops go to the hardest places to keep the peace
– They should fail frequently
Peace Causes Democracy
• Democracies are not as efficient as autocracies – Benefit: check and balance on power
• With external threats, citizens might be willing to concentrate power – So democracies only arise in places not prone to
war
– Or democracy recedes when conflict is likely
Peace Causes Democracy
• Democracies are not as efficient as autocracies – Benefit: check and balance on power
• With external threats, citizens might be willing to concentrate power – So democracies only arise in places not prone to
war
– Or democracy recedes when conflict is likely
Problems with Inferring Causation
1. B causes A.
2. A and B cause each other.
3. C causes A and B.
4. A causes C which causes B. But D also causes C which causes B.
Example: Wealth and Democracy
• Democracy is correlated with high domestic wealth. Therefore, democracy causes wealth.
Example: Wealth and Democracy
• Democracy is correlated with high domestic wealth. Therefore, democracy causes wealth.
– Yes.
– But wealth also gives the middle class political power. So wealth causes democracy. The relationship goes both ways.
Democracy and Peace
• Perhaps democracies causes peace but peace also causes democracy
• We cannot estimate the effectiveness of democracy by looking at the correlation between democracy and peace
Problems with Inferring Causation
1. B causes A.
2. A and B cause each other.
3. C causes A and B.
4. A causes C which causes B. But D also causes C which causes B.
Example: Arms Races
• Arms races are correlated with the outbreak of war. Therefore, arms races cause war.
Example: Arms Races
• Arms races are correlated with the outbreak of war. Therefore, arms races cause war.
– No. Bargaining problems cause war. States engage in arms races to prepare for war.
Democracy, Economics, and War
• Perhaps wealth causes democracy
• Perhaps the creation of wealth (i.e., trade) causes peace
Problems with Inferring Causation
1. B causes A.
2. A and B cause each other.
3. C causes A and B.
4. A causes C which causes B. But D also causes C which causes B.
Cold and the Cold
• Cold weather and sickness are correlated. Therefore, cold weather causes sickness.
Cold and the Cold
• Cold weather and sickness are correlated. Therefore, cold weather causes sickness.
– Not quite. Cold weather forces people indoors. Sharing cramped spaces allows germs to spread more easily.
Outline
• Brief History of IR Theory
• The Democratic Peace
• Explanations for the Democratic Peace?
• Correlation Does Not Imply Causation
• The McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Economic Interdependence
McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Countries with McDonald’s restaurants tend not to fight other countries with McDonald’s restaurants
– Originates from a 1996 NYT article by Thomas Friedman
Correlates of War
• Sustained combat between regular armed forces of two states
• At least 1000 combat fatalities total
• Each side has at least 100 combat fatalities or at least 1000 armed forces
Correlation versus Causation
• Clearly, Big Macs do not cause peace
• But countries with McDonald’s tend to be better developed and open to trade
– McDonald’s only expands to rich countries integrated into the global supply chain
– Perhaps open trade is causing the peace
Outline
• Brief History of IR Theory
• The Democratic Peace
• Explanations for the Democratic Peace?
• Correlation Does Not Imply Causation
• The McDonald’s Peace Theory
• Economic Interdependence
Economic Interdependence
• Countries that trade with each other tend not to fight each other
– True for disputes and wars
– Finding controls for other factors
Economic Interdependence
• Correlation does not imply causation
– Perhaps causation goes the other way
– Can we explain why trade relations might cause peace?
Explaining the Peace
• Last unit: trade creates a surplus
– Splitting the surplus makes everyone better off
Explaining the Peace
• Last unit: trade creates a surplus
– Splitting the surplus makes everyone better off
• Two units ago: range of mutually preferable settlements grows larger as costs grow
Explaining the Peace
• Last unit: trade creates a surplus
– Splitting the surplus makes everyone better off
• Two units ago: range of mutually preferable settlements grows larger as costs grow
– States cannot trade if they are at war
– Trade surplus makes war costlier
pA pA– cA– tA
A’s Share of Trade Surplus
pA+ cB+ tB
B’s Share of Trade Surplus
Bargaining Range
Bargaining with Trade
Explaining the Peace
• Trade makes war less appealing
• The less appealing war is, the less likely bargaining breaks down for most explanations for war
A’s Capital
B’s Capital
0 1 pA pA– cA pA+ CB
B is unresolved
A’s Capital
B’s Capital
0 1 pA+ cB
B is resolved